.oe*d auê p. iý £omml.4 by the r.Atcles for )ub- or by' Tusnday mon ent tssue. ards of thanks, obitu- ets' or other affaire la bublshd, viii b. r rates. GradeSearton Will Save Lif eI Let's Hastien-the Day!, t soine weeks ago inivestigation was nmade of 11w social and political beliefs ofý a man hoa short tinme, before liad iade a Be speechi at a Parent-Teacher Be meeting in Ne-%N, Trier town- Informed Ship. t as found' that bis poIitical l)eliefs. if: not anti- Anlierican, %vere decidedlY un-American. This <isc<very' led rnalNr- to believe, and justly-so. that those wvho miade the Pro- ~graiii for this meeting had not been as cAreful in their choice of 'a speaker as tbey should have been. ln colleges and universities, professors and 'students nmav discuss fullv and ,'freelv al varieties of econoiî and political, doctrines,. - No objection need be made' b. at presentatiôîî .a'nd exanlination of princi- pies and practices liow prevailing in Rus.- sia if the presentation , is impartial. We sce no reason wvhy an%, responsible adtîlt shouild be rnoved bv anything othier than lack of interest froin studying al sorts, of theories and actual situations. But if a person lias suich a repuitation as would reasonahiv cause on1e tô' expect that whcn sp-eaking in public he would endeavor to inculcate un-Amierican,ideas.*' then' sucb aperson sliould certàiiv. not be gi ven a place on the progratn of a Parent-Teacher meeting or any .sui 'l at meeting. Itis one thing to expound rad- ical doctrines and quite another thing to trv to sdil thern 10 an audience. But wve and mnost of 'our fellow prop- 'ertN--holders ;pay our tax bis rather promptly. iFirst. because the sooner they are paid, the sopner t.hey %vili cease both- ering us. Second, because we know very weil that our money is, needed for meeting Certain Village,.' coutv.t\,, and state bis. ir 1929 taxes.! Judge Wilkersôn lives in Glenicoc. Gleii- coe people, ail nortlî shore people Mi fact, inay justly be I)ardoned for. being 'sonie- %what proud of' the firI Judge stand taken Ibv himinW Wilkerson the. recent Capone trial. We are.protid of the cleairsiglitedniess., directness,' and' courage s hown in the statenient issued by .the jurist after lie had pronounced sent- enice u pon th e-de fendant.' We need in, our courts mnen w~ho, like .judge XVlkerson, are e ii of clear vision ani of iiishIak- abepatriotism We Nv onder what Adam and Eve talked aut when theïrwere'all alon > 'ini the Gardeli of Eden., Perhaps thev talked alput the tree which bore forbidden fruit. Nodub hy vndrdjust why the fruit ivas foi-hidden a'nd what 'would.happen if thev should bite into julst.oîîe apple. 0fý course. after. they were expelled f romi Par- adise, they had plenty t10 talk about.. Peo-ý pie w~ho' iournev into. nevv countries neyer lack su.bjeets for conversation. And thien certainlv etter equlippeï)d b (ive effect- thicketied. 't akaotoeaohr People, like t ak.-loi n lohr X'Iethier thev-. should ûr îîot is 'not the question. Thie ,truth renains , that prac- ticallv everv living 'perso i is itCreste(l ili hearing Iiii self spoken about and in taiking -about' others. 0f all îalk the 1-lelo-aniit-ow'-evrvlodvvarie tv is nîost popullar. \Ve franki1v recognize tbis interesýt« as areal interes.t..Wo"going t10 marry whoni and w-hen? is a :tlbriliing question and wevll -%'vrth asking and. answering. That Mrs. Inness is toentertain friends at a dininer next Tuesdav afternoon N.wiîh bridge Ifter. dinner is an imuportant Jtem,ý and worth elaborating. Jluina'n be'ings are Ionely creatures. 'l'le mnore thev ean find oùt about each other- the less lnelv they feel. iii w Our1 days. right. favorite Not too are Indian suimniier not too coid ; ju st, juy 01 Gab able. t Sonme ads iiay be ballyhoo, but as we horn. glance through ouir'Pet weekly-news-" Rea magazine, we fail' 10 find any suCh, )t witnessin in aüy a day. )riel was immense and, insofar as we've been to determiLe after considerable research, the nal "yes" man. 're stili' hoping "Gabe" ivIl- get to blow that allJy, a superb play--dlont' miss itl! -MIQUE.. selves Nue in the tace, but the canines. seem to he their own best spokesman, carrying 'the battie ai- nîiost to the -university campus. Frinstance, there's Bliie. the police dog wvhose barking warned resi- (lents of. an apartment 'tire right on the Midway the other mnorning, probahly saving ' sev.eral hunian, The ixarne, "Chiicago," does not seem toi be fatal tuail scholastic football enterprises. Anyway, the intramural grid teamn, entitlied ý'Chicago,"? won the lightweight championship at New Trrier High school recentiy. '!ie hieighit oi extra%,agant-e seenis tu have been rea 'cied. 'Twas just the other'iiight. that a, thri ftless, youth sc.aled -the fipanicial Himalayas,-right iii 'Wil- mette. TIhé youth waiked into a restaurant. and wvhiIe the radio %vas still pIaying he dropped a ji.tn.ey into the- silenit nickelodeon. Two jazz. melodies rent the air simultaneously iwith a terrifying waste of sharps, flats, syncopation and. currency. Even the soup garglers were momemtairily silenced. 'lie road to stiéçess ini the mnovies mustflot beý very siooth. -At least it doesn't, sound that way, io ne -ho listens to Rosco Ates, that stutterer of st'îtterers. ýqo get alopng with woinen a man, shoul4 be deéan- shaven aill thz timeé," reads an. advertisemùeùt for s.afety razor :blades.- -Mhat about King Solor-non?". blrsa skeptical reader., CAME THE' DAWVN (one mnorning r'eceîitliwhen %\e Nere tak-ing a walk. It wvasn't 'like Kipling's tu- nîultuous dawn. "Out ofChina 'cross the bay," -but one of the most :gr;acefut l suririses we have ever' seen. Spme. impressions: The slow ihi-fto sky to thé. southeçast. A silver coating of frost on. the grass, in. contrast with the, gol.deni sky toq thé east. Clouds of deep purple and briglit orange, alinost the hue of ouir.grade schooI class colors. A*f ew beils of cosmos, purple an([ freslh look.ig, déespite the frost. A gi-ýnt steain shiôvel slowly '.inibering up f or ,its day's work without the aid of a radio announçcer's uone, two, three." Silhouettes of trees rousing a sudden wonder tliat their branches are no longer concealed by leaves. M